June Arctic Ice Melt Sets Records

Below:

Next story in Science

Last month, Arctic sea ice reached its second-lowest extent and
the largest ice melt on record for the month of June since 1979.
At 4.24 million square miles, (10.97 million square kilometers),
the ice cap over the northern tip of the planet was nearly 10
percent below the average extent, according to satellite
measurements.

Arctic sea ice, which plays an important role in global climate,
grows and shrinks in an annual cycle, reaching its annual minimum
every September before building back up to cover the ocean during
the winter months.

An unusually low extent early in summer,
as happened in June, does not portend a record low in
September. A number of factors, including winds and the cloud
cover, influence the rate of melt over the summer, so it's not
possible to predict how much ice will remain at the low in
September, Walt Meier, a research scientist at the U.S. National
Snow and Ice Data Center (NSIDC), which tracks the ice, told
LiveScience in June.

Recent years have brought unprecedented lows to Arctic sea ice.
According to NSIDC records, September 2007 saw the all-time low,
while a German group based at the University of Bremen used
different data to conclude that September 2011 brought the lowest
extent on record.

The large melt this past June happened because cold Arctic
temperatures helped the ice extent grow during February and March
2012 to a relatively high level reminiscent of the 1980s or
1990s, said Josefino Comiso, a senior scientist at NASA's Goddard
Space Flight Center.

But during June, much of this growth disappeared. This is a sign
that the thicker, perennial ice that survives year after year in
the Arctic is unlikely to recover significantly from the 2011
record or near-record low, Comiso said.

Scientists blame receding sea ice on a combination of natural
weather fluctuations and global warming. This year is shaping up
to be a warm one. Last month also ranked as
the fourth-warmest June globally, and ushered in
the warmest 12-month period for the lower 48 United States
since record keeping began in the late 19th century.

A low extent in June is significant because it coincides with
the
summer solstice, the time when the Arctic receives the most
sunlight. While white ice reflects sunlight, dark water absorbs
the warmth and stores it, resulting in more melting later on.
More exposed water means more stored heat and, ultimately, more
melting, Meier explained.

Likewise, the change in reflectivity, called albedo, has the
potential to aggravate the warming of the planet, because a
decline in Arctic sea ice means more warmth is absorbed into the
oceans, rather than being reflected back out into space. This has
implications for global weather patterns.

The loss of sea ice also affects animals, including
walrus and polar bears, which depend on it.

While Arctic sea ice has been in decline in recent years, the
same is not true of the Antarctic sea ice, which forms around the
southernmost continent. The Antarctic sea ice has shown a small,
though not statistically significant, trend toward larger
extents, according to the NSIDC.

In June, during the southern winter, Antarctic sea ice was more
than 2 percent above average, ranking as the tenth-largest extent
on record since 1979. Research indicates these small increases
are a result of changes in weather patterns produced by the ozone
hole over the Antarctic.